Hihi conservation in New Zealand

Although reintroductions are attractive and highly visible conservation actions, they suffer low success. This is partly because reintroduction projects are not designed for learning, so it is not surprising that lessons are not learned or shared between projects.

Our hihi case study is different. Research moved away from a basic description framework, common in reintroduction biology, early in the species management. Instead, there has been a strong emphasis on planned research based on theoretical frameworks.

Hihi reintroductions have been undertaken for over 30 years and have always involved a considerable scientific contribution. This makes the hihi case study rare in that it is built on, and backed up by, a solid scientific base. As such it provides a powerful example of the strengths of evidence-based conservation and a structured approach to reintroduction biology.

There are now six populations of hihi in New Zealand

Why we are there

ZSL’s Institute of Zoology is closely involved in the hihi project and contributes a bulk of the scientific excellence used to inform management of this species. In addition, Dr John Ewen (IOZ) chairs the hihi recovery group.

Importantly the work not only benefits hihi but also has much wider global impact, through promoting structured and evidence-based approaches to reintroduction biology.

Female hihi drinking

Hihi recovery goals

Hihi declined from northern New Zealand in the early 1800s to become restricted to a single offshore island by about 1890. Beginning in 1980, an ongoing recovery program has aimed to increase hihi range and numbers using reintroduction.

Over 33 years the program has substantially changed from an “observe and recommend” approach to an evidence-based approach with explicit theory, focused monitoring and adaptive management.

This has resulted in increasing the number of populations to six and setting increasingly ambitious goals, such as reintroduction to the mainland and community-based management that is informed by good research.

Goal 1: Identify sites favourable to the establishment of unmanaged or managed hihi populations and reintroduce hihi to these.